Gwar frontman David Brockie died of heroin overdose


David Brockie, frontman for the Grammy nominated “extraterrestrial” metal band Gwar, died of an accidental heroin overdose in March, the Virginia State Medical Examiner’s Office said.

Brockie, 50, who gained an international fan base performing as a 43-billion-year-old alien vocalist for the satirical band, was found by his roommate on March 23 dead in his Richmond home.

Brockie died from “acute heroin toxicity and the manner of death is accident,” Arkuie Williams, administrator of the medical examiner’s office, said in an email.

US deaths from heroin have soared as prescription painkiller abusers turn to the drug because it is cheaper. Across the United States, the number of fatal opiate overdoses increased 45 per cent from 2006 to 2010.

Brockie’s band had returned earlier in March from a tour in Japan.

Jack Flanagan, the band’s manager, could not immediately be reached for comment on the future of Gwar. Don Drakulich, another founder of the band and one of its costume and prop makers, declined to comment.

Brockie helped found Gwar, billed on its website as “Earth’s only openly extra-terrestrial rock band,” in the 1980s with fellow art students at Virginia Commonwealth University.

The Grammy nominated group gained a worldwide following for its mix of thrash metal, grotesque costumes and outrageous stage shows.

Described by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer newspaper in 2007 as “the mutant child of early ’80s hair music,” Gwar’s onstage antics included simulated urination, dismemberment of lifesize puppets and lots of fake blood. It released its latest album last year.

Performing as “Oderus Urungus,” Brockie wore an elaborate costume of a horned mask, shoulder pads, massive helmets and armor with blades jutting out it.

In a profanity-laced 2014 television interview produced by Australia’s Soundwave music festival, Brockie said performing sober was not part of the act.

“For me, being wasted is not being wasted. When I’m sober, that’s being wasted, literally,” he said while in full costume, a bottle in one armoured hand.

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– Reuters

Game of Thrones fans, head to Sydney


HBO has announced that a Game Of Thrones exhibition will be on show in Sydney in early July this year, presented by Google Play.

The showcase will feature almost 100 artifacts from the show, including props and objects from the most recent fourth season.

At the moment, there’s very little news about the exhibition – apart from the fact that it’s coming. The worldwide exhibition has been known about for months, but it hasn’t been confirmed for Australia until now.

It’ll be entirely free, too – a nice concession in a country where you have to pay in one way or another to watch Game Of Thrones in the first place.

Some time in the first half of July, Sydneysiders will get a chance to look at some of the memorabilia from the hit series.

Apparently you can expect dragon eggs, fur cloaks, sword, banners, crowns and spears to be on display.

There’s still no news of the exhibition traveling to any other part of the country or to New Zealand, but keep your hopes up – we’re investigating further.

Here’s all the information we know so far:

“HBO today announced that Game of Thrones: The Exhibition will be coming to Sydney, Australia in early July, 2014. The immersive exhibition, specifically created to bring the enchanted world of Game of Thrones and its characters directly to fans, will be presented by Google Play. The event will be free to the public. Full dates and details will be announced shortly.

The exhibit will offer a fresh perspective on the show, focusing on key places, characters and relationships from the series. Open to the public free of charge, the not-to-be-missed 2014 exhibition will feature new installations and a collection of nearly 100 original artifacts from the show including select pieces from the fourth and latest season.”

Gizmodo

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My Kitchen Rules judge flees haunted hotel


My Kitchen Rules judge Pete Evans has run away from a hotel in Chicago after being spooked by ghosts.

The celebrity chef took to his Facebook account to explain “one of the weirdest experiences” of his life and why he left the hotel in the middle of the night without checking out.

“It suddenly felt airily cold and I sensed that something just wasn’t right with the energy, not only in the hallway, but even more so once I was inside my room. I tried to shake it off and tell myself it was all in my head, but the extremely uneasy feelings didn’t go away, if anything it became more intense, so I grabbed my bags and pretty much ran out!” he wrote.

“I bypassed checkout, jumped straight in a cab and got the %$&# outa [sic] there.”

The post has attracted more than 320 comments including some from ex-employees of the hotel claiming the rooms are haunted. Others took it as an opportunity to lampoon the man who made the term “activated almonds” famous.

“It is the USA, maybe you just inadvertantly [sic] ate some GMO corn, or beef, or soy etc!” fan Bob Black posted.

Evans, who claimed to be “super sceptical about the paranormal” before the incident which occurred over the weekend, doesn’t drink coffee, green tea or alcohol.

“There’s no doubt in my mind that what I felt was real, but each to their own,” he signed off.

Haunted ... Chicago's Congress Plaza Hotel.

Haunted … Chicago’s Congress Plaza Hotel.

The Congress Plaza Hotel was built in the late 1800s and is reportedly haunted by many ghosts including that of Prohibition-era gangsta Al Capone who used the hotel as his headquarters.

The north tower of the hotel is believed to be haunted by the spirit of a little boy who was killed with his brother in the 1930s after his mother threw them off the balcony before jumping herself.

Numerous travel blogs contain stories regarding paranormal activity inside the hotel, especially in the rooms adjacent to Room 447, the one Evans was due to stay in.

“If you ever find yourself staying at the hotel, avoid room 441. Security is called there more than any other room. Objects move, strange sounds are heard and guests have even seen the shadowy outline of a woman,” a post on Chicago Now stated.

However, his room – 447, got a mention on other sites like TripAdvisor for horrors of a different kind. Photos posted by past guests show the room contains a mouldy radiator unit and is frequented by cockroaches.

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– FFX Aus

Michael Palin calls David Beckham ‘a wimp’


David Beckham had a sink or swim moment on his recent trek through the Amazon.

The former soccer star was joined by friends David Gardner, Derek White and Anthony Mandler on the adventure, but not everything was plain sailing for the group.

Talking to Michael Palin at a press conference for David Beckham Into The Unknown, the 39-year-old star recalled a particularly scary moment.

“We’re going through treacherous waters and I notice there are holes in the boat,” he remembered. “I had to use a bucket to bail the water out. There was no way I was going to sink.”

He also recalled an encounter with a frog, who took a shining to the athlete and decided to follow Beckham back into his tent.

“It was bright orange and I was told it was pretty dangerous,” he exclaimed. “I was a bit nervous about that.”

Palin, the Monty Python star and travel writer quipped, “you are a wimp really. David Attenborough would have interviewed it [the frog].”

Beckham was inspired to take the trip after finishing a casual game of soccer and walking across a London park making his way home.

The thrill-seeking group spent 12 days trekking through the Brazilian rainforest, before meeting with the Yanomami tribe who were oblivious to Beckham’s superstar status.

“Victoria [Beckham, his wife] was not convinced that they wouldn’t know who I was, but I was kind of 95 per cent sure that I wouldn’t be recognised by the tribe – and I was right,” he smiled.

“The fact is, for the last 22 years my every day has been on a schedule and the fact that I woke up in Rio and we said, ‘Let’s go to the favelas.'”

Beckham enjoyed the freedom of his short lived anonymity, and soaked up the experience of living away from home.

Beckham said: “It is the first time I have ever had to explain what soccer is to anybody apart from Victoria.”

“We can have lunch when we want and have dinner when we want and kind of talk about what we wanted to and to meet people that I’ve never met before – that was refreshing.

“Obviously as we went along the trip I was being less recognised and by the end of the trip, when we were with the tribe, they didn’t know who I was, they didn’t know what football was, and it was incredible.”

Before leaving to the rainforest, Beckham is seen being given advice by his former Spice Girls wife. She asks him: “What are you going to do with your hair, with all that humidity” and he,

DVD review: American Hustle


REVIEW:

DVD review: American Hustle

(Roadshow Entertainment, M)

If you are one of those who judges a film on the basis of the number of Academy Awards it garners, you would be inclined to consider American Hustle one of the competition’s greatest losers.

Ten nominations and no wins. That has to mean something, right No.

Awards don’t really mean anything. A film stands and falls on its own merits and the glittery, red carpet sideshows often have very little reflection on how good a movie actually is.

In 1991 Dances With Wolves beat the superior Goodfellas for the Best Picture Oscar. And four years later in the same competition the great Pulp Fiction was passed over in favour of the awful Forrest Gump.

Of course, I have a predilection for crime thrillers, so naturally I would say that.

It’s all subjectivity folks.

There are no hard and fast rules or guidelines that dictate which film is “better” than any other, or whether one film is more worthy of your viewing time than any other. It all comes down to your personal preferences and tastes.

Which is why I can unreservedly say on the record that American Hustle is a much superior film to 12 Years a Slave, which got the Best Picture nod in the most recent competition. I can state that categorically on the simple basis that it’s a crime story, and I really like those.

Slick, stylish, very well acted and thrilling, American Hustle is testament to the prowess of its leading players and the abilities of director David O Russell (The Silver Linings Playbook, Three Kings). Here he has created a Scorsese-style film that would surely rank among the best of that director’s prolific output.

As career con artist Irving Rosenfeld, Christian Bale heads a great cast. The one-time Batman is unrecognisable with an unbecoming paunch and comb-over. He is matched by the chameleonic Jennifer Lawrence as Irving’s unhinged, vindictive ex-wife and the Amy Adams in sassy-yet-vulnerable form as his seductive partner-in-crime.

It’s a twisting tale of players getting played in the hedonistic 1970s. Evil gangsters, corrupt politicians, even more corrupt FBI agents – this is great material.

Blu-ray review: Doctor Who – The Complete Fourth Series


REVIEW:

Blu-ray review: Doctor Who – The Complete Fourth Series

(BBC/Roadshow Entertainment, PG)

Last Christmas Peter Capaldi became the latest actor to play the Doctor.

His few seconds in the role at the end of The Time of the Doctor will have been watched and rewatched by fans the world over who are curious to know what he will make of the job.

While we will have to wait until August to see the new Doctor join Clara Oswald (Jenna Coleman) on her adventures in time and space a less than subtle clue to Capaldi’s abilities appear in the fourth series of Doctor Who episode The Fires of Pompeii recently released on high definition Blu-ray for the first time.

Back in 2008 David Tennant was the tenth Doctor, Catherine Tate his third companion Donna Noble, and Capaldi the Roman trader whose home the Tardis ended up in ahead of the eruption of Mt Vesuvius in 79 AD.

The Fires of Pompeii was a fan favourite long before Capaldi was cast as the Doctor, for all its intrigue and drama, but now you have to wonder whether show runner will find some way of working Fires of Pompeii into the new Doctor’s back story.

Reality TV contestants need a reality check


It’s time for reality show contestants to wise up, lower their expectations and realise they are just a cheaply paid one-season cast member on a TV series.

Revelations by former MasterChef contestant Jules Allen on the ABC’s Australian Story on Monday night that she was used up and spat out by the cooking show should come as no surprise.

“You think that it’s just going to be this amazing, mind-blowing journey …. but it also knocks you around (and) at the end there’s no one to put you back together … the end result is its a ritual humiliation,” she said.

But that’s very much the reality of reality TV.

Contestants could think of themselves as being the person plucked from the crowd at a theme park to perform a skit on stage in front of hundreds of paying customers.

Admittedly, there’s no pot of gold or book deal on offer at a theme park, but in essence it’s the same thing.
Reality show contestants are expendable, cheap talent who entertain viewers and are replaced by a new cast the following year.

Other than the winner-take-all-prize or a recording contract, reality show identities are lowly paid and in the main receive a retainer to cover day-to-day living expenses.

If they were actors in a long running TV series, the pay scale would be massively different, but they’re not. And that’s one reason why the format is so appealing to the networks.

Shows like Big Brother and My Kitchen Rules are expensive to produce but the cast is relatively cheap to hire.
Even The Voice, which pays a small fortune for mentors Ricky Martin, Will.i.am, Kylie Minogue and Joel Madden – the real stars of the show – spend next to nothing on the singers.

No matter which show it is, Beauty And The Geek, Big Brother, The Voice, My Kitchen Rules or MasterChef, the cast provide the entertainment at a relatively low cost.

The only real financial joy is for the winner of the show or those who manage to turn their one-off reality TV experience into a career.

Some of the more successful reality show contestants are Big Brother trio Chrissie Swan, Ryan “Fitzy” Fitzgerald and Blair McDonough, and MasterChef’s inaugural winner Julie Goodwin.

Others have had varying levels of success and there are hundreds of reality show contestants who have gone back to living normal lives.

Some have tried to leverage something out of their experience, even appearing in glossy men’s magazines, but with limited success.

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To be fair, production companies go to extreme lengths in selecting contestants, even conducting psych and background checks while also providing counselling during and after the show.

Allen’s claims that MasterChef is not reality television but orchestrated television for the purposes of entertaining a viewer is on the money.

“You’re an entertainer but you’re a powerless entertainer and a vulnerable entertainer and you don’t realise that until you’re some way down the track,” she said.

Allen’s observation hopefully serves as a reality check for the next batch of the 15 minutes of fame cast members.

– AAP

Game of Thrones should change how we think about TV


Our current “golden age” of television drama has largely been marked by an obsession with realness.

Everything is holding a mirror to something, and that something is us, as we were and as we are. Period shows like Deadwood and Mad Men are obsessive marvels of historical detail, while The Sopranos and Breaking Bad offer studies of American families so nuanced we feel like we’re at the dinner table.

Even bygone genre chestnuts like Battlestar Galactica are reimagined into cutting-edge geopolitical allegories. The Wire – in my opinion, the best show in history – is the pinnacle of this, a work so rigorously journalistic it’s taught in sociology classes in esteemed universities.

Game of Thrones, HBO’s fantasy series based on author George R.R. Martin’s still-unfinished A Song of Ice and Fire saga, is not like those shows.

It is about swords and sigils and dragons and frozen baby-crazed zombies and it is decidedly uninterested in transcending these trappings or ironically critiquing them.

As such it represents a strange convergence of hierarchies, a work from a genre (fantasy) not traditionally associated with prestige in a form (television) newly associated with prestige on a network (HBO) most iconically associated with that transition.

Game of Thrones is a terrifically fun and immensely popular show, but can a work so flagrantly inauthentic actually be important television

The answer is yes, and precisely for its unreality, its joyful hostility toward anything like allegory, commentary or social relevance. Much like Star Wars and Hogwarts and other great Neverlands, Game of Thrones doesn’t hold a mirror to anything.

It is aggressively false, a work of far-fetched imagination so intricate and finely realised it becomes compelling on its own terms, disorienting and dazzling us in the ways that only the best storytelling can.

This is a show in which we cheer on an adolescent girl’s precocious transformation into a serial murderer; this is a show in which a character’s desire to release people from slavery is convincingly rendered as a conundrum.

The most recent episode ended with yet another shocking death, a character we’re coming to hate killing a character we’d come to pity, to save the life of a character we’ve come to love. How are we even supposed to feel Other than, yet again, thrilled.

Often when we refer to art as “escapist” we mean it in a passive sense, some numbing and palliative diversion. Game of Thrones is escapism that actively transports, with virtuosic and unrivaled intensity.

Last season’s “Red Wedding” sequence is one of the most notorious moments in television history, but for all the anguish wrought by its content it is a micro-masterpiece of cinematic storytelling.

The gathering claustrophobia of the doors being shut, the strange dread evoked by the invented connotations of an invented song, and of course, the cold and crushing zoom of its final shot, a Russian nesting doll of throat-slitting.

The world of Game of Thrones is an immense one, and in terms of sheer narrative scope the show’s only rival is The Wire itself. But while The Wire built vertically, with each season focusing on a new cross-section of Baltimore, Game of Thrones expands horizontally, characters and locations drifting in and out and entire strands of plots left alone multiple episodes at a time.

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For a show with such a reputedly sadistic relationship with its viewers’ emotions, Game of Thrones has an extraordinary reverence for our attention span: One of the reasons the show’s traumas are so effective is that they’re so patiently crafted.

And the sadism is overstated, or at least misunderstood. Late in its first season, Game of Thrones took the galling step of violently dispensing with its protagonist, a character we’d been led to believe was the show’s focal point.

For all the carnage that’s ensued since, the execution of Ned Stark is the show’s most formative moment, the moment it truly spread its wings and bonded its viewers into a strange Stockholm Syndrome with the show’s universe that’s perversely pleasurable.

After all, when nothing is safe, anything is possible. That sense of possibility – so expansive, so outlandish – gives the show its soul, far more than any of its fleshy titillations.

We don’t watch TV to look in a mirror, we watch it to look at something else, something prettier or crazier or just completely different. Game of Thrones creates a suspension of disbelief so immersive it feels almost childlike, some great cultural bedtime story for people who thought they were too old for such things.

If The Wire is important for what it tells us about urban America and social institutions and the moral failures of late capitalism, Game of Thrones is important for what it doesn’t tell us about any of these things.

Instead it tells us is that for an hour each week we can be something like kids again, and for all those letters indicating all those “adult” situations that precede it every Monday, that’s no small achievement.

-Slate

John Green on the move from page to screen


John Green says he is a novelist with a day job making YouTube videos. That seems a modest position description, particularly right now: he has been named one of Time’s 100 most influential people, and has written an international bestseller that has just been made into a Hollywood movie.

The Fault in Our Stars, which came out in 2012, is Green’s fourth novel for young adults (he has co-written a fifth). It has been a phenomenal success from its first publication. Green made the mistake of vowing he would sign all pre-ordered copies, and ended up autographing the entire first print run of 150,000.

The story’s central characters are Hazel Grace Lancaster and Augustus Waters, two sharp, witty and fiercely intelligent teenagers in love. They both have cancer, and their dark, funny and devastating story provides obvious pitfalls for a Hollywood adaptation. Yet the path from book to film was fast and harmonious, and the movie has been made with a kind of imaginative fidelity that is likely to find favour with the novel’s most demanding devotees.

Green, 36, says he wondered if it were possible to make a Hollywood film ”in which the leading woman has tubes in her nose for almost the entire movie, but she’s not treated as a precious little thing, she’s not treated as a mere tragedy.”

“She has a full, rich, complicated life,” he says. “And I really worried that nobody would be able to do that. But in the end I was convinced by the passion of the producers and the studio; they seemed totally committed to all the stuff that mattered most to me.”

At the same time, he knows films and books are different beasts. “I really don’t feel an ownership over my books once I’ve finished with them. Once they’re out, I really don’t think they belong to me. I think books belong to their readers. And so I hope I wasn’t too precious about it, or too protective about it.”

He went to the shoot, intending to watch for a few days, then stayed for most of it. “The director and producers thought it would be helpful to have me, [so] that the actors could bounce ideas off me and talk to me about characters.”

He had a ball. He describes how moving and fascinating it was for him to watch Shailene Woodley, who plays Hazel, cry on cue, over and over, for several hours, then ask him if he’d like to go for

Video premiere: Kimbra’s 90s music


Kiwi Grammy winner Kimbra has released the video for her new single 90s Music today.

The track is the first from her upcoming sophomore album The Golden Echo, which is set to released in August.

“90s Music embraces so many things I like to explore musically,” Kimbra says. “I am always attracted to the meeting place of light and dark, sweet and sour – the juxtaposition of angular sounds and head-crushing distorted elements sitting alongside a breathy bubblegum vocal. Instead of making the track a throwback musically, I wanted it to feel like a nod to the past from a futurist perspective.”

Lyrically, 90s Music celebrates Kimbra’s affection for an era she associates with growing up.

“It talks about sharing music as a kid and falling in love to a soundtrack of TLC, Mariah, Nirvana, and Michael Jackson, then slowly growing up and away from that period of time,” she explains.

“There is an undertone of yearning for a return to that place, but it’s also about an acceptance of time passing and that although things have changed, the music and the memories live on. Nostalgia is a common theme for me. I have a strong connection to my teenage years so I wanted to capture that boisterous playful energy with this song.”

Buy 90s Music from iTunes now.

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– Stuff